Satellite images released indicate that work at Gaza pier in
the Mediterranean Sea is going on at an accelerated speed by the US military, but
US motives are also being questioned.
Reportedly,
the Pentagon has confirmed media reports that the pier that is being built by
the US military near Gaza will cost at least $320 million, which is double the
original estimate announced for the project.
“The cost has not just risen. It has exploded,” Senator
Roger Wicker told Reuters.
“This dangerous effort with marginal benefit will now cost
the American taxpayers at least US$320 million to operate the pier for only 90
days,” the Republican lawmaker added.
Around
1,000 US military personnel have been deployed to Gaza’s waters, including from
the army and navy, who are working in close coordination with the Israeli army
and navy to build the pier that the Pentagon says will be operational in May.
The huge investment has raised question marks on how this
costly project will help the man-made starvation across the Gaza Strip.
Once the aid reaches Gaza, it will undergo another land
inspection by the Israeli military, despite being inspected in Cyprus before it
reaches the people of Gaza.
Who
will distribute this aid inside Gaza? Who will send it to the north where food
and water are needed the most? These are among the many key questions that the
White House has declined to provide any answers to.
More importantly, more than 90 aid trucks are being
inspected but blocked from entering Gaza. A leaked internal US State Department
memo has admitted that Israel rejects aid trucks from entering the enclave in
violation of international humanitarian law.
Essentially, the Israeli occupation forces, which have
killed a record number of aid workers numerous times, will be in charge of
handling the aid via this questionable project.
The United Nations has been calling on the Israeli
occupation regime to allow a significant increase in the number of humanitarian
trucks to enter the enclave to avoid famine.
500 trucks entered the Strip on a daily basis before the
war. UN officials say the daily figures needed now vastly exceed pre-war
levels.
Last week, the UN pointed out that the average number of
trucks entering Gaza every day during April was 200, which is far below the
required level.
Critics
of the US project say it is difficult to see how 90 extra trucks, should they
reach the Palestinians, will alleviate the humanitarian crisis given the time,
costs and the number of service members involved in the US port being built off
the Gaza coast.
“How much will taxpayers be on the hook once – or if – the
pier is finally constructed?” Wicker noted.
The administration of US President Joe Biden, which
announced the project in early March, has been accused of allowing excessive
food shortage in Gaza under its watch by refusing to pressure the Israeli
occupation regime to stop preventing food and water from entering the enclave.
There
are serious questions over the real motives of the US for establishing the
pier. It has been criticized by aid agencies as glossing over the humanitarian
crisis facing the Palestinians.
There
are suspicions that the US wants to maintain the port and turn it into a
military base or use the floating pier to transfer portions of the Gaza
population elsewhere in what is legally defined as ethnic cleansing.
In a statement, the Israeli military said it is involved in
the port’s construction with logistical support as well as an Israeli military
brigade, which includes thousands of soldiers, along with the Israeli navy and
air force.
The
only party that is not involved in the project is the Palestinians, who have
once again been sidelined. Hamas has warned it would target foreign forces,
uninvited, on Palestinian land or water.
“We
categorically reject any non-Palestinian presence in Gaza, whether at sea or on
land, and we will deal with any military force present in these places, Israeli
or otherwise … as an occupying power,” Khalil al-Hayya, a top Hamas political
official, told the Associated Press last week.
He added Israeli forces “have not destroyed more than 20% of
(Hamas’) capabilities, neither human nor in the field.”